Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 205, 10 July 1917 — Page 4
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1917
TOUR
UCHMOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM
m
ed Every Evening Except Sunday, oy
Palladium Printing Co.
Building. North Ninth and Sailor sireew.
Leeds, Editor. E. H. Hams, Mgr. it the Post Offlco at Richmond. Indiana, as Seo
ond Class Mail Matter. ' ' ' ,
believe this country is bound to prosper
he war period, and intend to go ahead
strong advertising." Suberstein &
.
pompany, Duiutn, Minn.
Newsboy Service
y parents believe that newsboy service is
Jntal to the development of their sons. Er-
Jly they associate evil companions, late
Ccigaret smoking and all the pitfalls that
beset the youth with the newspaper boy's
He
jNewspaper men scoff at these objections and
that they are unfounded. The guards
own around a newsboy to protect his morals
I more stringent than those to" be found ? in
st of the industries where boys are employed (Bad boys are weeded out of the delivery ser
Wdable, conscientious boys can be used, for
service demands integrity and high morals its success, so that in the very nature of the
the so-called bad boy is eliminated before he
ks mischief among his associates.
Educators do not look upon newsboy service
detrimental factor in the development of the
ith. They encourage boys to obtain newspa
routes and sell papers.
ie National Education Association is now in
ton at Portland, Ore. Anna Y. Reed of Seat-
fter a personal study of 1,387 newsboys who
ied the schools of that city last year, told
lucators in an address last night that newservice is an opportunity for educational and ional guidance. Part of her address is apid: , The basis of true preparedness in education is comI knowledge of all the agencies which' appeal to and We childhood. Newsboy service offers an unexA opportunity to Interpret wage-earning experience 5rms of general education and to give large numbers chool boys the highest type of educational and vocatl guidance guidance based on definite vocational irience. ...
economic pressure Is not the motive for service, tne kter of the work is. Boys say' there is 'pep' in it tn A anH nrhnol work is not.
Boy Scout Influence and home influence were fourid i tha two strongest moral-social Influences among
twivc
"Analysis of character qualities essential to success
ewsboy service indicates tnat it aemanas toe practice ae same qualities which are valuable assets for gen-
leducation. .Fifty per cent of the Seattle newsboys
bank accounts. The two first Liberty Bond purcbasn Seattle were made by newsboys, 11 and 12 years of
both born In Russia.
'Analysis of the vocational elements comprised in sboy service Indicates that boys are constantly, in conwlth one or more of the fundamental precepts upon
Ich all business systems rest. Mvihnv MrvirA blind allev? No. No occuDation
ich offers an opportunity to learn so many fundament-
kbuslness principles is a blind alley. Many boys find
Y occupation a Dima aney mese are Dima aney Doys. Ian t Vi a rti Mt oohrwola understand their mission, accent
rind fulfill it, we shall have fewer blind alley boys."
Why Not Now? Many housewives do not seriously appreciate ie necessity of food conservation. Should any untoward accident befall the crop lis summer, there will be a gigantic food short-
ge this fall and winter. Grim starvation stares
lis in the face.
Miss Elsie Marshall is writing a series of ar-
icles for The Palladium dealing with the topic
bf food conservation. She is eminently qualified
for her work. Her advice ought to be heeded by every woman in this community. Save every scrap of food. Can vegetables and lay them aside for this winter. Success will come only if every woman believes it is her patriotic duty to help. Do not depend on ydur neighbor. Do it yourself .
Interest in Baseball
The attendance at the ' Richmond Central League baseball games exceeds the fondest hopes
of the public spirited men who organized the club
last spring. The city appreciates the opportuni
ty of seeing good clean sport and is" proving its
interest by a record-breaking attendance.
No sport is so popular, and deservedly so, as is
baseball. It suit the American temperament. It has speed, dash, and variety. Sides change fast enough to keep the temperament of the nervous
American keyed to that high pitch which he en
joys. Players must use their thinking apparatus with almost every play. The science of the game
is simple enough to fascinate even those who do
not understand all its fine points and yet intricate enough to give the double-dyed fan extreme
satisfaction.
The city of Richmond in the hundred years of its existence has not had its name mentioned so
often and so regularly in the newspapers of the
Middle West as it has since the Central League
season opened. v
The advertisement which the Richmond team
gives its home city is worth thousands of dollars to this community. Richmond is in the league
and citizens and fans want it to remain there. , Crop Destroyers ...
In the early days of the Klondike rush, a man
caught stealing provisions was ordered executed
by the miners' court. The theft of provisions
hundreds of miles from a base of supplies, was
the equivalent of an attack on a man's life, hence
the infliction of the death penalty.
News dispatches tell of an organized effort to
burn the wheat crops of the West. We do not suggest capital punishment for the men caught in this nefarious practice, but do believe that life imprisonment would not be a punishment out of
harmony with the culpability of the offense.
The whole world virtually is dependent upon
the crops of the United States this year. A per
son who ruthlessly sets out to destroy a portion
of the yield is guilty of a crime against all hu
manity and is amenable to the most severe pun ishment the law can inflict.
Beli
leve in Insurance
The sum of $98,000 paid to beneficiaries in Richmond in '1916 shows that the value of life
insurance as a protection for dependents is un
derstood and valued by the residents of this city. Insurance can be obtained at so small a cost
and under such favorable arrangements that al
most every head of a r family can afford to lay
aside a few cents every day to buy a policy.
The money left to the widow and the orphans
by a man who has an insurance policy, or a num
ber of them is an effectual help at a time when the knowledge of not being left without a cent is
highly consoling and comforting.
Young men can make no better investment
than to purchase a policy when they still are be
low majority. Purchased at seventeen or eight
een years, a policy Will mature at a time when the man often needs money, or will be paid up at an age when it is satisfying to know that you have
laid aside a snug little sum for your family.
LEWISBURG, 0. MrVAda Rice and small daughters
ave been visiting ner aaugmer. mr, rand Mrs. Elmer Unger of Dayton fNora Hartley of Dayton, has been the
guest of her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard T lehtcan and family, the nast
week Mrs. Otto Ford had the rais-j
fortune of tearing the ligaments In her right arm and limb Sunday Funeral services for Michael Kerr, was held here Thursday afternoon in the Salem Lutheran church, conducted by the pastor. He was 43 years old and left a widow, con and two daughters Mrs. Lon Disher and daughter
were called home Sunday on account
of the serious illness of Mr. Disher. They were visiting relatives In Clarmount, N. J Lucille Jones of Gordon, is spending the week with Ethel Beam.. . . Virgil Sweeny and wife, Roy Poe and wife and Robert Fanshier were Dayton visitors Sunday evening. ....John Brown and family were in Dayton Sunday Clifford Locke and family spent Sunday with her parents, Joseph Sweeny and wife.. .'. .James Gates and wife spent Saturday and Sunday with her brother. Russell Sweeny and wife, near Itchaca Charles Beam and family and William Eliss and family spent Sunday in Dayton. .. .Esther Leiber, Mary and Anna Wilson, Olive O'Connell, Florence and Edith Sweeny, Eva, Anna, Georgia, and Catherine Rice. Florence Ruff. Ethel Beam, Ruth Wilson, Gertrude Ellis and Cleda and Hazel Ryder spent the
"Fourth of July In Brookville.
CASEY GTS JOB
FT. WAYNE. Ind., July 10 Richard H. Casey, of this city, has been appointed superintendent of the northern division of the Grand Rapids and Indianapolis railroad to succeed James W. Hunter, who was killed in an ele
vator accident in Grand Rapids a few days ago. Mr. Casey is promoted from the office of master of transportation, a position to which he was advanced
to succeed Mr. Hunter when that of ficial was made superintendent.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
SAYS Gee. I love
POST TOASTIES
-Ma
gets 'em from the grocer"
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makes one "peculiarly dean; a cleanliness known and experienced by millions of people who prefer it above all others. Try it tonight; know for yourself. Sold by leading Grocers and Druggists. Us bat little It' 9 all lather Send yor name on a postal for a liberal sample Free James S. Kirk & Company, Dept 1917 Chicago, U. S. A.
Champagne Drive Reopens
French deliver vigorous assaults on the Chemin des Dames, but are repulsed, Berlin says. 1. The original battle line In the Champagne region. 2. The Chemin-des-Dames, where the French yesterday made renewed attacks east of Cerny. ' . , .
GROWING POWER OF GERMAN BANKERS SEEN AS MENACE - BY BERLIN TAGEBLATT
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands, July 10. The Berlin Tageblatt, in a financial article, calls attention to the increasing danger of German financial power being concentrated in the hands of a few through the growth of -"multiple directorships." German bankers, it says, are rapidly accumulating directorship in all the concerns in which their banks, are Interested. Thus, the number of directorships held by Louis Hagen, a Cologne millionaire, is now 56; Karl Furstenberg of Berlin, has 55; Herr von Schwabach, has 42; Baron Simon von Oppenhelm and two or three others have 40 each; while there Is a large group of bankers and industrial leaders who boast of between 30 and 40 each.
B RAMMER TO GENEVA
Vernon Brammer, boy scoutmaster, left Monday night for Lake Geneva, to attend the summer Y. M. C. A. school. He will be gone about two
THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT We must think evil before we can do evil. Regrets and excuses have no power to build success; doing is better than thinking too late of what you should have done. When you do all that you are paid to do, and do it right the first time, then you earn about half your salary. Make a bigger job for yourself . and your employer will make a bigger pay check for you. The Want Ad Takers at The Palladium office are anxious that you shall get profitable results from your advertising. Consider their suggestions.
and one-half weeks. Conrad Ottenfelt, drill sergeant, will have charge of the scouts while Brammer is gone.
are out
1 W TV 7
AV
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forAUGUST!
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Starr Record (HAPA HAOLE HULA GIRL.
7fioo KAWAIHAU WALTZ
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LIES DREAMING. v. Manhattan Quartette
A Host of Other Hits Hear the clear pom tenor of Chaa. Chuk in Tor My Country and Your Country" and "I Tried to Raise My Boy to Be a Hare. Ada Jones, in ner delightful soprano, atngs "Cross My Heart and Hope to Die" and "If I Catch tbeQor Who Wrota Poor Butterfly V Two unosaal tenor ealections are
"Huckleberry Finn" and "Everybody Loves a Little Bit of Irish," "Paxzo" and Where the Black Eyed Susans Omar" axe dandy foxtrots. The Starr Mifltary Band oners "That Creepy Weepy Poeling" and " Tfl tha Clouds Roll By." Jones Bros. Saxophone Band makes a bit with "Varney'a Ideal" and "Andante from Organ Sonata," Don't Miss These Treats Come and near any or all of these. We will gladly play them for yoa without the least obligation. We know ther will give yon a vary high opintoaof the exceBence of 8tarr Records sad their moderate paces will please yoo. Call asy time.
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J1.50 INDIANAPOLIS 4.50
Round Trip
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Every Saturday and Sunday
Via
terre haute; Indianapolis & eastern
TRACTION COMPANY
Qood going on all trains leaving Richmond from 12:10 P. M. Saturday to 12;10 p. m. Sunday. Good returning on Sunday only. Special Attractions i Baseball Parks Theatres See Local Agent tor further information.
No Richmond Business Man or Woman Can Afford to Go Without a Vacation
It's false economy to begin saving at the costof health. When it comes to a vacation, the best is none too good and the best doesn't mean the ' most expensive, Colorado, for example. . Go where you can get the most diversion and nerve rest, ask any physician if that advice isn't sound, and Colorado admittedly offers far more diversion than any other vacation land in America, plus the most wonderful scenery ana the widest variety of sports in the world, plus the far-famed, invigorating,' nerve-resting Colorado air. r Try Colorado this summer and go via the Rock Island's famous
j&oclxy Mountain IJnuteil Daily to Deaver, Colorads Sprias and Pubis
a superb train de luxe with no extra'fare over the Rock Island Lines the safe, quick way of complete comfort and superb service, the way that experienced travelers always take. Any one of the many splendid trains from ' Richmond to Chicago or St Louis, bat be sure to make it "Chicago or St Louis to Colorado via Rock Island." The only direct line from the East to both Denver and Colorado Springs. Other convenient modern all-steel trains from Chicago, St Louis and Memphis. Let us advise you where to go, how to get there, and show you how little it wfll cost
FILL OUT
TEAK OCT
MAS. TODAY
Sock Island Travel Bureau. 615 Merchant Bank Bide.. Indianapolis J. F. Powers, D. P. A.
Please send me illustrated literature on Colorado.
Name
Address
Rock Island Lines Safety caid Service first a
St A hmm H
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N Appreciations from dentists who have personally proven Senreca. Names on request . .. Blrmlacham, Alabama, Mar. 30, 1917. I am uaiac Suraci BmV. Cum hav tmprovad woadarfulljr. RocbMtor, N. Y Fab. 7, 1917. I find Swine a gnat haip In amy nwk. Chioaco, UU Mar. 10, 1917.
I find by Uwtl months'
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the
and
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T. 11 1 . ' Jfc5 "
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PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS TftYTHEU
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